On November 29th, Fernando González Llort, one of the Cuban Five condemned in 1998 by a Miami court to long prison terms and regarded by most world opinion as political prisoners, met with Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega. The meeting ended a week-long visit to Nicaragua during which González was awarded the freedom of Nicaragua's capital Managua, as well as three other cities, including León, Masaya and Estelí. He was also honoured by Nicaragua's legislature, the National Assembly. González dedicated his visit to promoting solidarity in Nicaragua with his three companions still in prison in the United States. Fernando Gonzalez Llort was released after finishing his prison sentence in February of this year. Another member of the Cuban Five, Rene Gonzalez was released in 2013. The three still imprisoned are Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino and Antonio Guerrero. The US government accused the five Cubans of spying, despite their making available to the US authorities evidence of terrorist conspiracies on US territory to attack civilians in another country, Cuba. This year in the UN General Assembly 188 out of 193 countries again voted overwhelmingly for an end to the US blockade of Cuba, many governments called for the release of three members of the Cuban Five still in prison. In recent weeks, The New York Times has published a series of editorials calling for the exchange of the remaining three Cuban Five in US prisons for United States citizens imprisoned in Cuba. Interviewed for Telesur English during his visit to Estelí, Gonzalez Llorát explained the latest legal development: “What's going on at the moment in legal terms is that a writ of habeas corpus is before the Florida District Court, the same court that tried us originally and before the same judge that has presided over the case for all these years. That writ argues that new evidence has appeared that was not known at the time of the trial and might have changed the result of the trial at that time.When Amnesty International released its 2010 report on this new evidence in the case of the Cuban Five, AI stated, “The new evidence that has emerged since the trial – of journalists being paid to plant prejudicial stories against the accused during the trial – also raises concern about equality of arms in that the government, unknown to the defendants, were stacking the case in the media – and also as we have seen very possibly in the court-room itself – in the prosecution’s favour.” Asked what he hoped for from the continuing global solidarity campaign in support of the Cuban Five, Gonzalez added: “For us the priority is to bring together all possible sectors and people with a sense of justice and ethics to join the demand for the freedom of our companions who are still in prison. The case was vitiated politically from the start. We were arrested, tried and subjected to the treatment we suffered, all for political reasons more than for legal reasons. The judgments against us in the courts, despite the sound legal arguments in our defence, were due to political reasons not legal ones. Source URL |